The Chaldean Education and Career Center (CECC) of Michigan is a group of community educators who have organized to help communicate, encourage, and guide academic and career achievement. Membership is open to anyone who believes in assisting the community in matters relating to education or career placement. CECC members include school administrators, teachers & college professors, counselors, social workers, career coaches, career placement professionals, college students, along with others who passionately believe in helping the community through education and employment related matter. Some of the CECC community projects and services are listed on the right.

If you would like to be a part of CECC simply visit our membership page, complete the online application form, and choose a committee to join. CLICK HERE to begin!

Living & Lifestyle

Since many Chaldeans have been forced to flee their land, it is not uncommon to find Chaldeans experimenting on new foods that are reminiscent of home with an accepting flavor of their new lands. The new foods are often a mixture that includes traditional Chaldean meals or cooking styles adapted to their host countries.

The term shish kebab comes from the word kebab, which originally meant fried not grilled meat. The Arabic word was derived from Aramaic kabbābā, which has its origins in Akkadian kabābu meaning "to burn, char".

Kebabs were a natural solution for Chaldean nomadic tribes. Unusual meats were marinated not only to tenderize, but also to get rid of some of the gamey flavor. Skewers were easy to find in the wilderness as useful utensils for both revolving the meat and easy eating.

In America, younger Chaldeans have learned to turn Mom’s traditional cooking into an assortment of new dishes. Try this flame-seared Asian spicy kebab that has a sweet and spicy kick.

Michigan, USA – The cold air has thawed in the great lakes states and Chaldeans are fast enjoying the summer days. With temperatures getting warmer, many Chaldeans are firing up their barbeque grills. Grilling is one of the most treasured outdoor activities to do every summer for Chaldean Families. Shish Kabob, chiken tooka, and grilled vegetables folded in warm grilled pita bread with garlic sauce and a nice cold drink is usually enough to give any Chaldean a glimpse into the essence of back-home joys.

www.CHALDEAN.org collects a number of community tips on choosing the best gas grills. Next week we complete our report on Chaldean barbeque tips. Community members are asked to send in their best tips when barbequing Chaldean foods to info@chaldean.org.

California, USA – The spring season brings with it a welcoming initiation to travel. Chaldean students excitedly plan for the end of the college winter semester by traveling home or planning a visit to out-of-state relatives. For Gina Abaya, a student at San Diego State it is traveling to see her favorite cousins in Michigan. “I was an only child. My cousin Cynthia and I were best of friends. We were sisters,” Gina says.

While Gina may be looking forward to seeing her favorite cousin she dreads the travel headaches. “Packing is fun. I always pack way too much, but don’t mind. I do mind all the extra travel charges and the security checks that always seem to take so long and seem to put everyone on edge. I love the extra security, but do they really have to make it so stressful,” Gina asks.

Chaldeans preparing to travel will experience no shortage of indignities and none rivals the worry of the security line. Will the fashionista in front of you take twenty minutes to unlace her knee-high boots? Will your bag be the one selected for a dump-it-all-on-the-counter inspection? Did you forget something in your bag they consider dangerous? What are the new restrictions? How long will it take?

Today’s www.CHALDEAN.org article is to help Chaldeans prepare for the travel process to overcome the dramas and cliffhangers and help keep your wits and your schedule. It will help you keep up your odds of zipping through quickly.

Who are the elders in your family? The obvious answer is that they are your parents, grandparents, uncles, aunts, and eldest cousins -- basically, any relative who's getting up in years. But that doesn't really answer the question, does it? In a Chaldean family, there is a big difference between being elderly and being an elder.

Chaldean Elders are the people we respect and turn to for answers and perspective, thanks to their many years of life. Most of all, they are the people who raised you and your loved ones and helped you grow into the people you are. For several decades, they carried the burden of caring for your family and leading it to better times. Now it's your turn to dote on them. Ensuring the welfare of our elders should come as naturally to us as raising our children.

The stress Chaldeans experience from rushing through their lives has a negative effect on their health. The hard work, schooling, family responsibilities, church duties, and charitable causes Chaldeans often pursue can take its toll.

Here are 5 secrets Chaldeans in our community share with readers on how they might manage their stress in today’s world.

One at a Time Tasks
Rena Shayota writes, “At work I hate it when I have ten different customers asking me for five different things. It wears you down.” Rena is right. Chaldeans may think they are reducing stress by accomplishing more than one thing at a time, when in fact, it is causing more stress.

California, USA – “You have to know your rights. Otherwise they may take advantage of you when you rent from them,” says Khaloud “Kelly” Heso, a property manager in Orange Grove Townhouse and Apartments in a small town outside of San Diego, California. “I once worked with a company that taught us not to share renter rights with the tenants. I could not work for a company that operated in that way, so I left and came to Orange Grove.”

Chaldeans should know what their rights are when renting and you don't have to be expert in landlord-tenant law to protect yourself. Chaldeans are reminded to review their rights when renting or leasing and to always read the agreement before signing the dotted line.

Laws that protect both landlord and tenant have become so complex that understanding your rights can be difficult. Since landlord-tenant law varies by state, the key is knowing your rights -- preferably before you even sign your rental agreement. Understanding your state law and the terms of your lease are your best guarantees against future problems.

Michigan, USA – “If you’ve ever gone a month without spending any real quality time with your spouse, you know how negatively it can affect your marriage. All relationships need to be nurtured, and none more so than our relationship with our spouse,” says Eddie Kuza from Farmington Hills, Michigan.

Kuza attended the new Couples Club at Mother of God Chaldean Catholic church with his wife. The Couples Club organizes fun outings and events for engaged and married Chaldean couples. “The Club is fun. The group organizes some great activities, like dinner and a play, or a small trip up North, or great tickets to a basketball game.”

Kuza says the goal of the Couples Club is to nurture strong marital relationships and create opportunities for Chaldeans to have fun. Successful Chaldean marriages may be best seen as a triangle, with God at the top and each partner at the lower corners. The closer we draw to God, the closer we’ll be to each other. “Marriage is not a ‘done deal’ at the altar; it’s a continuous, daily ‘I do.’ Chains do not hold a marriage together. It is threads, hundreds of tiny threads, which sew people together through the years.”

The Chaldean Couples Club event brochure offered these wonderful tips to perk up a relationship.

Massachusetts, USA – Chaldeans are well known as compassionate fighters against injustice. Many help feed refugees, run for cancer, care for the sick, and offer aid to the needy. “It is because of our faith,” says Ann Kajy. “As Christians we are taught to use our talents to help lift the burden of others.”

Talented and famous Boston designer Denise Hajjar is helping to lift the burden of those suffering from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. The disease is a neurodegenerative disease that attacks both upper and lower motor neurons and weakens the brain and spinal cord.

Hajjar showed her spring and summer line at a fashion show benefiting the Massachusetts chapter of the ALS Association. Before the event kicked off, Hajjar said she planned to show 56 different looks in lots of cheerful colors: oranges, yellows, blues, and pinks. "The dress is back in a big, big way," she promised. "Women are embracing it again." And in recognition of the current economic, uh, constraints many shoppers are under, she kept her frocks in the $200 range and created bags for less than $100. "We really worked hard at that," she said.

Hajjar is well known for her elegant styles and custom look. “She knows exactly how to fit the right fashion to the right person,” says Kajy. “I have long been a fan of her styles and have a wardrobe filled of her inspired designs.”

Chaldeans taking advantage of the buyers market in real estate have to remember one thing: you still have to sell your current home. Chaldeans trying to sell their home should follow these easy do it yourself (DIY) tips. In fact, some of the most important fix-up projects a Chaldean homeowner can do to help speed the sale of their home in the spring can be done with a little planning and elbow-grease.

A good cleaning, a fresh coat of paint and groomed yard are the basics of preparing for a home sale. Like most everything in life, first impressions are important and a neat, clean look gives a good first impression to buyers.

Just a few weeks after Salim Bashi was laid off as manager of a taxi cab company in Michigan, he found himself driving through Detroit with his 11-year-old son, Sam. Sam knew that his father was unemployed and that money was a concern in their family.

Salim says, “We stopped at a red light, and saw a homeless man pushing a shopping cart. I could see in my son’s eyes he was worried. I asked him what he was thinking. First he was scared to answer. He wanted to know if we would be like that man with the shopping cart."

www.CHALDEAN.org speaks to several Chaldean fathers about how losing a job can affect family life.

Illinois, USA – The University of Chicago joins a handful of other colleges in their effort to create a cohabitation campus. The college will now allow a male student to sleep in the same room with an unrelated female student.

Amy Batuo says the school has essentially become a whore house and is considering transferring. “I am not going to pay them to help students hook-up. There is going to be so many reputations and lives ruined. They have gone way into left field on this one.”

This is not the first time the school has sent shock waves for its stance on sexual promiscuity and promotion. The campus Student Health and Wellness Fee, which all registered students pay, covers regular contraceptive items like condoms and lubricants. All are available at its Student Care Center including what the center calls "Emergency contraception.”

Michigan, USA – On this day of gratitude, commonly referred to as Thanksgiving, Chaldeans help show the spirit of good will and giving. Chaldeans throughout the metro-Detroit area are once again out in full force helping their neighbors this thanksgiving. Chaldean churches, businesses, and Chaldean charity organizations will be giving out well over a thousand turkeys and side foods to needy families. Chaldean churches and groups like the Chaldean American Ladies of Charity, Chaldean Teens Coming Together, and Chaldean American Professionals plan on distributing thanksgiving meals and turkeys.

Other Chaldean charity groups like UR of the Chaldees are buying grocery for seniors who live alone. Adopt-A-Refugee-Family is raising funds to help needy refugee families scattered throughout the world. The Newcomers group is taking underprivileged youth out on field trips. Chaldean grocery stores and restaurants are also helping.

Danny Yono, owner of J's Kabob restaurant will provide free Thanksgiving feasts for anyone who can’t afford a meal with the trimmings or doesn’t want to eat alone. From 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday, J’s Kabob, 2941 Coolidge, Berkley, will host its second annual free Thanksgiving Day dinner. Anyone can get a carryout of turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, corn and rolls.

gan, USA – St. Joseph Chaldean Catholic Church in Troy, Michigan continues to host an array of services for refugee assistance. Along with English classes, school tutoring for children, and family support services the church campus will now feature special workshops geared to refugee families.

“The love and help for us at St. Jospeh and all the churches, makes me thank God every second,” says Habiba Yousip through a translator. “If it was not for our Church we would all be dead.”

The workshops provide informative sessions to help refugee arrivals transition to life in the United States. Sessions include knowing your neighbor, taxes and financial planning, keeping your children safe, apartment living, senior housing, food safety, and disaster preparedness.

You are My Sunshine, My only Sunshine'….Like any good mother, when Karen found out that another baby was on the way, she did what she could to help her 3-year-old son, Michael, prepare for a new sibling.

They found out that the new baby was going be a girl, and day after day, night after night, Michael sang to his sister in mommy's tummy. He was building a bond of love with his little sister before he even met her.

The pregnancy progressed normally for Karen. In time, the labor pains came. Soon it was every five minutes, every three, every minute. But serious complications arose during delivery and Karen found herself in hours of labor.

Would a C-section be required? Would the mother survive? Would the baby live? The entire family and medical staff were on pins and needles. Finally, after a long and exhausting struggle, Michael's little sister was born. But she was in very serious condition.

California, USA – The results are in for the www.CHALDEAN.org voter knowledge survey. The survey was created to register Chaldean voter knowledge of the presidential campaign and extrapolate which presidential candidate would best address the needs of Chaldeans.

Dr. James Brothman, psychometric expert and president of Brothman Research, created the survey for www.CHALDEAN.org. A psychometric survey is a more sophisticated method than the traditional polls that ask respondents who they plan to vote for in the election. The scientific survey reveals that not every issue carries the same weight of importance to a voter, nor does every voter prioritize the issues in the same way.

“We create a scientific survey that captures issue concerns and matches the concern to the candidate that would best meet the respondents need. We do not ask who they are voting for or why. Instead we apply a reverse engineering process that filters out emotions. We ask what issues are important to you and how important are those issues to you. Based on the information we receive are able to determine who the respondents would vote for if they are truly voting on issues only. The difference between the survey results and the actual voting results tells us how much campaign marketing influenced the vote.”

Based on Dr. Brothman’s research of Chaldean voter respondents, 88% of the Chaldean community should vote for McCain / Palin if they are driven by the issues important to them.

Dr. Brothman also reveals the leading issues important to Chaldeans this election.

Michigan, USA – The Chaldean Education and Career Center urges Chaldean parents with sons to take advantage of an upcoming family workshop featuring national best selling author and internationally recognized authority on boys and men, Dr. William S. Pollack, PhD.

The event will be held on November 3, 2008 from 7 pm - 9 pm at the Oakland Schools Building, located on 2111 Pontiac Lake Road in Waterford, Michigan, 48328.

Dr. Pollack's presentation will address the crisis of boyhood in America, specialized techniques for reconnecting with boys, new approaches to "Mothering" and "Fathering", and new models of understanding "What makes boys tick"

Michigan, USA - Sister Beth Murphy, the Volunteer and Community Outreach Coordinator of the Refugee Services Office in the Archdiocese of Detroit is looking for two dedicated volunteers who can assist their staff with the important task of helping Iraqi refugees adjust to life in the United States.

Chaldeans are invited to this uplifting and rewarding opportunity of sharing their gift time and talent for the benefit of the hundreds of refugees who are arriving in the Detroit Metro Area. The Office of Refugee Services has already resettled more than 700 refugees this year, improving the quality of life for many Chaldeans. The office anticipates another 200 refugees by the end of this year.

The Archdiocese of Detroit is looking for fluent speakers in English and an office assistant to help with clerical work. Both positions require less than a few hours a week.

Archbishop Charles Chaput of Denver Colorado recently addressed a group gathered in a in Sydney, Australia. The topic was, “Mission Possible: This Double Life Will Self-Destruct.” In a chillingly honest fashion, Archbishop Chaput shares his thoughts on our lives today, as Catholics, and how we ought to realize our need to live wholly and completely for Christ.

We can't live a half-way Christianity. The organizers of tonight's event were right [those who named it ‘Mission Possible: This Double Life Will Self-Destruct’]. Every double life will inevitably self-destruct. The question then becomes: How are we going to live in this world? How can we lead a Christian life in a secular age? We can't really answer that question until we get some things straight about what it means to be a Christian. And that means first getting some things straight about Jesus Christ.

This is another one of the by-products of our secular age: we don't really quite know what to think about Jesus anymore. A few years before he became Pope Benedict XVI, then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger wrote something that is unfortunately very true. He wrote: "Today in broad circles, even among believers, an image has prevailed of a Jesus who demands nothing, never scolds, who accepts everyone and everything, who no longer does anything but affirm us. . . . The figure is transformed from the 'Lord' (a word that is avoided) into a man who is nothing more than the advocate of all men."

We all know people -- friends or family members or both -- who think about Jesus in these terms. It's hard to avoid. Our culture has given Jesus a make-over. We've remade him in the image and likeness of secular compassion. Today He's not the Lord, the Son of God, but more like an enlightened humanist nice guy.

This is, very much, the message in Catholic radio host, author, and speaker Teresa Tomeo’s new book, “Newsflash! My Surprising Journey from Secular Anchor to Media Evangelist.” Teresa did her best to live a half-way Christianity and found the great many ways in which such a life will self-destruct.

Planning a wedding is surely one of the most romantic and exciting times in people’s lives. From the moment a couple gets engaged to the moment they say “I do”, couples are fully submerged in planning for the big day. Furthermore, the excitement of engagement prevents many from realizing that there are other events that must be planned during the engagement period. This can be extremely stressful and time consuming, particularly in today’s day and age where couples are both working and/or going to school full time.

As a full time wedding coordinator who realizes the complexity of planning big events, it is no surprise to me when married couples approach me after the fact and say, “I wish I would have hired a wedding planner when I was getting married!” And you may ask, why?

“For the Catholic there is no room for cowardice," says Frank Dado. “Cowardice is the opposite of the moral virtue of fortitude. Cowards are weak in difficult times and inconsistent in the pursuit of good. They are unable to resist temptation and easily succumb to sin. They fear death, trials, and persecutions. It is from either pride or cowardice that sin takes hold and grows. A Catholic coward will quickly become a Judas and sell-out his faith, his church, and his people.”

Most Chaldeans are secure about their faith. A legacy of courage in the throngs of tragic trials and persecution has proven Chaldeans do not break easy. “Evil has tried to penetrate the church walls of Chaldeans since the early formation of the church. The walls remain. Our church leaders are assassinated, thinking the flock will scatter. We do not,” says Dado defiantly. “Evil has now changed its strategy. It can not break Chaldeans, so it is trying to melt us.”

Dado refers to the slow burn Chaldeans endure in the West. “Forced to flee Iraq, rather than convert from their faith, Chaldeans now have to contend with the steady fire of Western sin.” Western society and culture continues to promote forbidden deeds as trendy, modern, progressive, or hip. Dado says Chaldeans are afraid to take action against what they know is immoral and evil. “Instead children call their parents boaters and misguidedly run into the arms of evil thinking it is cool or that they will be accepted.”

The pressure to remain silent or tolerate evil is real. Schools and college campuses have long used humiliation and shame to force Catholics and other pious groups into silence. This is why Dado considers them cowards. He says the cowards have been frightened into obeying what they know to be wrong.

Michigan, USA – The Church of Transfiguration in Southfield, formerly St. Michaels hosts the Southfield 40 Days for Life kick-off campaign. The 40Days for life team invites the public to join the prayer effort as the prayer group gathers at 6:45 p.m. today, Tuesday, September 24th to help put an end to abortion.

From September 24 - November 2, our community will be one of more than 170 cities in 45 states joining together for the largest and longest coordinated pro-life mobilization in history -- the 40 Days for Life campaign.

40 Days for Life is a focused pro-life effort that consists of:

40 days of prayer and fasting, 40 days of peaceful vigil, and 40 days of community outreach. Chaldeans4Life help lead the effort in the Chaldean community. Group leaders say the are praying that, with God's help, their groundbreaking effort will mark the beginning of the end of abortion in our city -- and throughout America.

Chaldeans interested in becoming part of the growing movement are encouraged to take a stand for life.

A great way to strengthen your Chaldean speaking skills is to speak to your pet in Chaldean. Domesticated animals distinguish body language and then associate a sound to the expected behavior. In short, animals, like humans can learn different languages.

Combined with behavioral modification techniques your family pet can learn a long list of Chaldean commands. However, the commands have to be combined with reinforcement. The model is similar to the work of famed psychologist B.F. Skinner.

The following video clips of Sheero demonstrate how positive reinforcement paired with the Chaldean language can help your family pet learn your language.

Located a little more than 10 miles or 15 kilometers from Mosul there stands a, “Hill of Stones.” For many Westerners this would seem to be an uninspiring and gloomy place to live. However, to many Chaldeans the rich and fertile land of Tel-Kepe (Telkaif), Iraq was once a wondrous place of adventure, peace, and communal living. In contrast to its name Tel-Kepe (The Hill of Stones) the region was quite fertile making many Chaldeans rural farmers living off the land and mastering the science of agriculture in some of the harshest of conditions.

A very high majority of the inhabitants of Tel-Kepe were Chaldean Catholics. Indigenous people of the region who were converted to Christianity by Mar Addai and Mar Mari, disciples of St. Thomas and later merged with the Roman Catholic Church in the seventh century.

The fertile lands in the river basins of Euphrates and Tigris were the home land of rich and complex societies. The word 'Mesopotamia' is Greek meaning ‘land between the rivers’ derived from Greek mesos (middle) and potamos (river), thus 'land between the rivers'.

Flowing south out of Turkey, the Tigris and Euphrates are 250 miles apart. The Euphrates runs south and east for 800 miles and the Tigris flows south for 550 miles. The two rivers join and stretch to the Persian Gulf as the Shatt al Arab. The area that now comprises most all of modern Iraq and part of Syria.

Mesopotamia's richness attracted neighbors and its history is a pattern of infiltration and invasion. Although there were meager rainfalls in most of the region, the land was well irrigated by canals. The fertile soil yielded rich food and heavy crops of date palms, useful fiber, wood, and fodder. Both rivers have fish, and the southern marshes contain wildfowl. Being a land of plenty, commerce, and strategic worth the river valleys and plains of Mesopotamia were often attacked from the rivers, the northern and eastern hills, the Arabian Desert, and Syrian plains.

Most of the conflicts were internal to the region and small skirmishes between warring tribes and factions. It was not until Persia (Iran) invaded and defeated the Chaldeans, the last rulers of the region, that the area is forever lost to foreigners.

"Sometimes healthy competition for what we want turns into a problematic desire to have something merely because a rival already has it. This is not just based on what we want, but also on what we don’t want our perceived rival to have,” writes author, Susan, Barash in her book “Tripping the Prom Queen: The truth about Women and Rivalry.”

Seventy percent of the five hundred women interviewed said they were familiar with the concept Barash writes about. Barash is a professor of gender studies at Marymount Manhattan College in New York and became fascinated by women's relationship. Can sisters, mothers and best friends be jealous and supportive at the same time? In fact she found that rivalry and envy often pervades female relationships.

The women were interviewed on female competition. The study revealed that many women are competitively mean. In her book, Barash outlines why women compete with each other differently than men do with other men and why women often want to sabotage powerful female rivals.

Michigan, USA - No one would dare refute that Chaldeans often come from large families. The Chaldean culture values the importance of family virtues and cooperation. Chaldeans often hold large family gatherings, dinners, and celebrations.

One family is taking the family gathering up a few notches. The Yaldo(o|u) family is hosting their 2008 family reunion at Camp Chaldean in Michigan beginning at 1 p.m. on Sunday, July 27. Nearly a thousand family members are expected to attend the family gathering.

Saher Yaldo, a leading community entrepreneur and committed volunteer for the Chaldean Voice radio station has been instrumental in the reunion. “We invite everyone with Yaldo(o|u) blood pulsing through their veins. This includes all children and grandchildren whose mother or father are Yaldo(o|u), says Saher.

“Guests are also welcome to invite close friends and relatives as well. We will be holding a special Mass for all our guests led by Fr. Basel Yaldo of St. George Church at 4 p.m. and we have games, gifts, and more as well.”

A strong, supportive Chaldean relationship is built from a couple's words and actions. With work, children, and other responsibilities, sometimes it is easy to take your spouse for granted or forget to do the things that strengthen the marriage. Here are some ten little things every Chaldean couple can do that will have a big payoff for your marriage says Jennifer Kinaya, marriage counselor and researcher on the psychology of better relationships.

Chaldeans who are bilingual or Multilingual have an advantage over the rest of us, and not just in terms of communication skills. The multilingual brain develops more densely, giving it an advantage in various abilities and skills, according to new research.

According to the 2002 U.S. Census, more than 7.5 million children between the ages of 5 and 17 (about 14 %) speak a language other than English at home and the number of bilingual speakers is expected to increase in the coming years.

Most children have the capacity and facility to learn two or more languages. Research suggests there are advantages to being bilingual, such as, linguistic and metalinguistic abilities and cognitive flexibility, such as, concept formation, divergent thinking and general reasoning and verbal abilities.

Researchers from the Department of Imaging Neuroscience and experts from the Fondazione Santa Lucia in Rome researched brain densities of bilingual people. They recruited 25 people who speak one language, 25 who learned a second European language before age 5, and 33 who became bilingual between ages 10 and 15.

All the participants spoke English as their primary language. Those who had learned a second language later in life had practiced it regularly for at least five years.

Michigan, USA - It is no coincidence that nearly 1,000 fathers had to lose their life 100 years ago for the right message to be heard. That message is that we love our fathers, but how and why did they lose their lives. Most of those that died were Italian immigrants, writes Fr. Eugene Francis Briggs (1908-2006), a Catholic priest and a Fitchburg native who dedicated much of his life to the study of the Monongah disaster. A tragedy by any standards, whereby on December 6, 1907, there was a mining disaster at the Consolidated Coal Company in Monongah, West Virgina that claimed their lives. It is still considered the worst mining disaster ever.

In the spirit of those fathers that the First Father’s Day was born of the father’s role of provider and the risk he takes as a laborer throughout the country, being a primary wage earner. “The same holds true to for our Chaldean fathers,” says Tom Issa, a father of three. “Our Chaldean fathers literally climbed mountains and crossed oceans to provide and protect their family.”

Issa adds that Chaldean fathers continue to take incredible risks providing for their families. “They work very long hours in some of the most horrible conditions, trapped in bullet proof and risking their lives. It is good that we acknowledge, celebrate, and honor their sacrifice to our family and community.” Issa speaks of the inaugural “Honor Thy Father” dinner hosted by Mother of God Church in Southfield, Michigan. The dinner brought over 400 Chaldeans out for a night of dinner, entertainment, and applause for Chaldean fathers.

{Must be a registered member of www.chaldean.org to view the photos of the 2008 Father / Son Celebration Dinner}

California, USA – “I am very excited and my entire family is ready,” says Nick Siman, San Diego County Fair’s self proclaimed biggest fan. Over a million residents will be joining Siman as “the greatest indoor-outdoor show on Earth” opens their doors.

The San Diego County Fair opens Saturday, a 21-day extravaganza that costs nearly $140 million to put together. The 360-acre fairground was a disaster-relief center for horses and people evacuated during the October 2007 wildfires.

In a few short days, Chaldeans by the thousands will join the millions of other guest and flock to the sports themed fair. Pop stars, celebrities, and professional athletes will be freely mingling with the crowd, signing autographs, and performing. An estimated 1,600 entertainment acts will let the good times roll on nine stages.

California, USA - The El Cajon Community Development Corporation (then known as Downtown El Cajon, Inc.) has been looking for a novel way to build their downtown community. Hoping to tap into the business creativity, entrepreneurship, and community family spirit of the Chaldean community, the organizers invite Chaldeans to join their concert series along with other residents of El Cajon.

The 13th Annual Concerts on the Green is a free weekly summer concert series featuring live music for all ages that beings Friday, May 23, 2008 from 6:00 to 8:00 pm on the Prescott Promenade in Downtown El Cajon. Opening night of the 2008 Concerts on the Green will feature the Rockabilly sounds of The Stilettos. The concerts are free to the public. Concerts on the Green 2008 is offered every Friday evening through September 5.

Chaldean lifestyle and eating habits have changed. Living in the American culture and adopting American eating habits have led to an increase risk of obesity and chronic illness in the Chaldean community. Chaldeans have lived through many health crises in the past but the latest threat, though largely preventable, has silently grown to potentially deadly proportions. Chaldeans as well as Americans are in the grips of an “obesity epidemic,” whereby 65 percent of the American population is overweight and a growing number of Chaldean toddlers and children are obese.

Even those who may not consider themselves overweight may be carrying a large amount of deadly belly fat, known to increase the risk of heart disease in relatively slim people. Most Chaldeans have a basic sense that being overweight is bad for their health, but few appreciate just how dangerous it is.

Controlling fat excess is really fairly simple: Eat for health, not for pleasure. This is not to say that a healthy diet has to taste bad. But it is critical to keep in mind that the goal is a diet that provides health. The loss of excess fat will always come when you follow a healthy diet.

Johnny Bitti hopes to sell his home before July. Raymond Kalu, Century 21 Hometown agent from Sterling Heights, Michigan says, “Bitti needs to start thinking about how to make his home stand out from the rest. The trick is to spend time and money on fix-ups, getting the house to look neat and open instead of spending money on remodeling projects.”

Kalu seems to have his hand on the pulse of the market. Remodeling magazine completed a study of homeowners across America and the result is that the owners aren't recouping as many improvement costs as they could in recent years. In fact, real-estate agents advise clients not to overdo it, regardless of what the local market conditions are like.

The investment for any remodeling projects is added to the selling price of the home. Chaldean real-estate agents say that the buyers market is fiercely competitive and sellers will have trouble selling a home with value added costs added to the bottom line. The reason is that asking prices are based largely on comparisons with similar homes in the area, Kalu says. “And in the many markets that aren't exactly booming right now, buyers have more negotiating power over the price of a home,” he adds.

www.CHALDEAN.org contacted a number of Chaldean real-estate agents and asked them for their best tips for Chaldean homeowners looking to sell. Here is what they had to say…

Michigan, USA - Many Chaldeans are often forced to work in dangerous neighborhoods and high crime areas. Some feel the local city police apathetic concern for Chaldean businesses bolsters the criminal to act. Although Chaldeans have taken wise precautions to reduce the threat of attack and robbery, Chaldeans remain victims. With bullet proof glass, immediate armed robbery alarm systems, video surveillance systems, and armed security guards or employees Chaldeans remain at risk.

Working to address these challenges the Chaldean Education and Career Center is working with other Chaldean organizations to help address these growing concerns. Groups like the Chaldean Justice League, Chaldean American Bar Association, Chaldean Caucus, and the Chaldean Federation of America are consistently looking for ways to help reduce attacks against Chaldeans and their property.

In that spirit, the Chaldean Education and Career Center is organizing a series of Advanced Small Arms Self-Defense Training near Camp Chaldean. The CE&CC along with the Livingston Gun Club and Live Safe Academy will be holding a three Self-Defense training session.

Chaldean parents are curious on how to capture their little one's creative energy when the weather gets cold. Being cooped up in the house all day can make a toddler honery and troublesome. Chaldean parents can help channel that energy by trying at least one of our nine fun, brain-boosting projects.

California, USA - Chaldeans are busily preparing for the holidays. The community is getting ready for big family dinners, the traditional extended family tours, and the hectic gift giving calculations. It arrives at the same time every year, and yet Chaldeans continue to get confused, stressed, and frustrated over the potential holiday madness. Chaldean holiday preparations can be less taxing for Chaldeans if these 7 simple steps are followed.

Step 1 - BE PREPAREDCreate a budget for your gift purchases, a list of who has been nice, and stick to it. Chaldeans have huge families and trying to buy a gift for every cousin, friend, neighbor, or employee will have you filing for bankruptcy. Chaldeans are generous and charitable, but a line has to be drawn. Create a gift list to fight the urge of seeing an item on clearance that you think would be perfect for someone not on your list. Write down a few ideas for presents, based on the preferences of those on the list and hints they have given you throughout the year.

Michigan, USA – The Camp Chaldean open house brought thousands of community members out into the fresh October air. Some Chaldeans traveled for three hours to join the tour and share in the celebration of new of the community campground.

“We worked very hard to get the property ready for the camp open house,” says Adil Kallabat, Camp Chaldean president. “We had crews working around the clock for nearly a month making repairs, cleaning, landscaping, and decorating the buildings.”

Chaldean diocese volunteers came together to offer community tours of the camp property and answer any of their questions. Nearly ten bus loads of people left from church parking lots to the campground.

(Must be a registered member of www.CHALDEAN.org to view the photo albums. Registration is free and begins by selecting the register link in the upper right-hand corner.)

Which is harder, making time for yourself or making time for Christ? As a mom of three boys under 5, the challenge to bring Christ into our souls and family is an interesting one. While we make it church weekly as a family, more than only one hour a week is needed to build the necessary spiritual strength and prepare the family for what lies ahead.

So what do you do? Well, I have started collecting great tips on how the Chaldean family can bring Christ into their lives during their daily routine. Here are some of the tips I have collected thus far.

California, USA - Wise and thoughtful Chaldean parents continue to harp on their children to honor other people's kindness and generosity. Most children despise having to write thank you notes. Sadly, parents who fail to teach their children how to recognize and acknowledge the good they see in others will eventually have to contend with the consequences of a self-centered, ungrateful, and spoiled child.

Michigan, USA - Tickets sold out in less than a few days to the highly anticipated event. Over 300 Chaldean women gathered at Mother of God Chaldean Church Hall in Southfield, Michigan for the 2nd Annual Mother’s Day Fashion Show Dinner. The event was held on Friday, May 4, 2007 and began at 6 p.m. in the evening. The event organized by the Our Chaldean Ladies Social group of the Chaldean church holds a number of special activities targeting Chaldean women.

The annual fashion show event helps to raise funds to help Chaldean causes around the world and all proceeds of the event go directly to the Chaldean community. The highlights of the evening were two incredible fashion shows and the ability to receive or win gifts totaling close to $10,000. However, winning rave review was the “Pure of Heart - ‘To be Admired not Desired’ Fashion Show,” hosted by fashion stylist Patrice Konja and produced by Remon Jiddou. The performance sponsored Nahla's Place, This is Me, and Platinum Salon, of Birmingham, Michigan.

(Access to all photos of the event are included for registered members of the community website)

Michigan, USA - Chaldean-American Janie Shina, 24, of West Bloomfield, Michigan is counting on the generosity of the Chaldean community. Shina has been called on a mission to run a marathon to help fight cancer. The longtime Cancer Society volunteer felt it was time to take on a fraction of the challenge that cancer victims face daily.

Shina, describes an incident in which she felt she was “called” to help. “Before the New Year, I wrote down the things that I wanted to accomplish during 2007, and running the marathon was one of them,” said Shina. “And a week later, I received a letter from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Cancer Society requesting volunteers. Gods works mysteriously…this was my calling.”

For many Chaldeans the investment in their home is second to none. The luxurious master bedrooms, marble and slate countertops, elaborately decorated living and dining rooms, and routinely remolded bathrooms and kitchens seem par for the course.

The long hours and hard-work to eek out a small savings can disappear overnight when the decision to remodel. Most all remodeling project fail to return your investment in improving your home but some areas fair better than others.

If the choice to remodel is made out of vanity rather than actual improvement you are guaranteed to lose most all your investment. However, if the choice is made to genuinely improve the function, feel, and resale of the home you can recoup over 80% of your investment and enjoy the upgrade. Before you begin, a wise Chaldean homeowner will asking themselves:: "Where's the smartest place to put my money?"

Chaldean mothers ought to strongly consider the high risk of obesity, diabetes, and weaker immune systems for babies that are not breast fed. In light of the ongoing research that shows synthetic chemical baby formula is riskier than breastfeeding the world trade health organization is challenging multinational companies to stop considering profit over health.

The marketing efforts to get second and third world countries hooked on baby formula products have quadrupled. However, some countries are not buying into the scam and putting pressure on the corporations.

“Convenience, modernization, playing on ignorance and fear is the way they do it,” says Dr. Hannaa Bedawid, a Chaldean pediatrician. “The companies are using marketing and trying to make it seem as if it is shameful to breastfeed your child. I applaud countries like China, Malaysia, Israel, and the World Health Organization to standing up against corporate greed.”

Companies are being charged with illegal marketing, racketeering, vastly insufficient quantities of the essential vitamins, and suppressing studies and reports revealing the dangers of baby formula. One of the larger corporations, Abbott Laboratories, has recalled hundreds of thousands of fake liquid ready-to-feed infant formula.

Michigan, USA -- Zaytoon -- it means "olive" in Arabic -- is as fresh and appealing as that suggests. It opened this summer in an airy, high-ceilinged space that has housed several previous restaurants.

One of them -- La Fendi -- is a direct antecedent of the bright new Zaytoon. Brothers Tony and Raad Samona were partners in that Mideastern spot, as well as the original La Fendi in Lathrup Village. Both closed in 2003.

And so after another restaurant tried and failed in the West Bloomfield Township space, Tony Samona's son and daughter reclaimed the address in a strip mall that is pretty remarkable for its international array of restaurants.

For Enam (last name withheld due to reputable concerns for her children) the affair was unintended and regretful. “I was stupid and selfish,” Enam says about her extramarital affair. “I ruined my life, my children’s life; hurt my family, and all for what?” Enam, 45 was caught cheating on her husband with a co-worker while employed at a mortgage company. The affair ended a 25 year marriage.

Although much rarer in the Chaldean community than their western counterparts, divorce among Chaldeans is an issue the community continues to examine. “Western liberal values, materialism, promotion of reckless behaviors, stereotypical views, and choosing a poor spouse all lead to divorce if the clues are ignored,” says Joan Hannawa, a recent psychology graduate who completed her Ph.D in relationship psychology. “Chaldean men and women, have to learn new martial skills to cope, strengthen their marriage, and build a loving family when married in a western society. If they don’t, they are left vulnerable to the ills of western society. Eventually, without the proper defenses the illness will break into their marriage and destroy the family.”

Like most marriages, the Chaldean community considers marriage a special and sacred institution that binds one man to one woman for life. Fidelity is sacred in marriage. To lose such trust is immediate grounds for divorce in western societies. The same is true with Chaldeans. However, Chaldeans who divorce also face a community “Scarlet Letter” that further underscores the importance of marriage and the harm divorce brings to the couple, children, and community.

In this article www.CHALDEAN.org examines the Chaldean perspective on divorce and focuses on infidelity brought upon by work related relationships.

Michigan, USA -- Residents of Northville, Michigan are overjoyed at the new sports field and community park playground.

Northville Township Supervisor Mark Abbo graciously thanked residents for supporting the land acquisition and development of the sports field and playground. Residents approved the land acquisition and development mileage that paid for the park's $4 million price tag.

Abbo had a chance to share his excitement as he kicked the first soccer ball onto the field. "Anything worthwhile is never easy," Abbo said to reporters. The 242-acre park used to be empty space. Now it includes a playground, a dog park, one practice soccer field, five soccer fields and two lacrosse fields.

Michigan, USA - Mary Magdalena and Martin de Porres, the patron saints of hairstylist have enjoyed the recent calls for help. The dramatic changes in weather, a Chaldean party, and critical relatives can make any Chaldean conscience of their hair style.

From feathered wisps of silken locks to soft bouncy curls, Chaldean hair textures, colors, lengths, and styles have always been entrusted to the artistic hands of Chaldean hairstylist. The skillfulness of Chaldean hairstylists has long been sought by many outside the Chaldean community. From Middle Eastern, Asian, European, to the Americas all seeking the hottest hairstyle eventually find their way into a Chaldean salon.

Chaldean hairstylists have long been known as experts in art of styling hair. Marry such talent with the free market system and you have some of the world’s most renowned stylists and entrepreneurs.

No matter which stylist you visit these helpful hints should keep you sitting before the best.